Saint Leo University veteran student Brian Anderson is willing to talk about his experience with post-traumatic stress to bust myths held by the general public.

The U.S. military is downsizing. The war in Iraq is over, and combat troops are due out of Afghanistan by the end of next year. So more than 1 million service members are expected to enter the civilian workforce in the coming years.

That’s why two veterans are on a mission to help employers and the community in general separate fact from fiction when it comes to post-traumatic stress disorder.

First, not every veteran has PTSD. It affects only an estimated 20 to 25 percent of combat veterans, according to Saint Leo University associate professor Dr. Jim Whitworth, a 21-year Air Force veteran with a Ph.D. in social work.

There’s a lot to understand about post-traumatic stress and the best teachers are those with the diagnosis. However, most veterans are not comfortable talking about their traumatic experiences.

That’s where the bravery of Brian Anderson shines through. He is willing to share what can be painful details so clinicians, the public and employers have a better understanding of returning veterans.

Anderson joined the military because of September 11th. His first hitch in the Army was as a photo-print journalist with the 82nd Airborne Division. Anderson then became a Green Beret.

“I killed my first man on Dec. 31st 2008. And, you know, at that point it was more of a high-five type experience. I was psyched. I was really pumped about it,” Anderson said. “The second deployment, I went in, our very first fire-fight was eight hours long. And we killed 39 Taliban that day and we had a couple of our guys wounded.

Brian Anderson usually wears his Green Beret ring and these KIA (Killed in Action) bracelets that commemorate the loss of his friends on the battlefield.

“On Sept. 29, 2010, we were clearing a village and I got a call up from one of my teammates, Calvin, that they were held in building by a machine gun nest. So, me and a few guys went around and took out the machine gun nest. We called ‘all clear,’ but we we’re aware that the Taliban was there and killed both Calvin and Mark with a Dragunov. It’s a type of sniper rifle.

“We de-sanitized Calvin and Mark. We took off all their military gear and everything and put them on a medevac and then we continued on with our mission,” Anderson said.

As he described losing his best friend, Calvin, in combat, Anderson’s voice is almost matter-of-fact, his gaze did not waiver.

That’s because Anderson has told that story and other combat incidents countless times as part of his prolonged exposure therapy for post-traumatic stress. He said prolonged exposure therapy is designed to de-sensitize the person who experienced trauma. It worked for a while, but his PTS symptoms like hyper-vigilance continued.

So, he tried Accelerated Resolution Therapy and after a two hour session, Anderson said he was able to put his unpleasant memories into long-term storage. He likened it to defragging a computer.

Saint Leo associate professor Dr. Jim Whitworth is a 21-year Air Force veteran with a Ph.D. in social work.

“When people hear about veterans and some of the difficult experiences they have, they may over generalize or think that veterans are in some ways broken people,” Whitworth said. “Nothing could be further from the truth. They’re individuals who have been through a difficult experience, in many cases they have, but they’re having a very normal predictable response to that.”

He said veterans just want employers to give them an equal chance to compete for a job or a promotion adding they want to be considered for a job based on their character, their skills, and their knowledge.

So, Whitworth created the a workshop to layout the “Myths versus Reality of Post-Traumatic Stress” to help everyone in the community from employers to educators better understand PTSD and trauma response in general.

As for Anderson, the St. Leo student is now an employee of Pasco County. He starts Monday as Pasco’s Veterans Services director.

Whitworth compiled some websites to help those with post-traumatic stress and to help everyone else understand the diagnosis and debunk the myths and misconceptions associated with PTSD.

In a previous Off the Base blog post, 12 Organizations Working to Raise PTSD Awareness, there is a list, If you’re a member of the civilian community, of 10 things you can do to help raise understanding of PTSD. If you know a combat veteran in need of help, the VA has a myriad of resources.

One Response

PTSD is not a walk but also not a stigma. It is a hard health problem whose manifestations may appears after years and are not the same on all subjects. More depend also by situations already present, but the war against this invisible enemy is not impossible to win. Will, resilience, solidarity and aid by others, are a good base for win. Pharmacological treatments may aid together with the knowledge of brain functions and disruptions TBI, either physic then not such as blast, cause on any functions of brain that interest all human tissues.By this base we may work to combat and win, also when all seem be far, when society members seem be afraid. But, warriors, we are trained and able to combat and surpass any situation, also the indifference and, combating on more front, we are on the way to care the problem. Buddies, I understand it is not easy and more times we may fall; but ever we will rise and walk for the way that drive to complete care. Only make possible we aid you, make possible we aid our buddies. My thoughts and prayers are for you ever and, as mind and heart have no borders, I am sure we are together on this war. claudio alpaca